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If you need a custom setup or special lengths of couplings, contact us and we can put together something to fit your specific scenario.
These setups seem to have an outside antenna and a cable that goes inside to the modem. The problem is that the CLEAR modem has no connectors on it to receive the cable that comes from the outside antenna. How is the outdoor antenna going to connect to the inside modem?

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If you are not concerned much about aesthetics you could get this high gain outdoor antenna and place it indoors by the window: https://www.rfwel.com/shop/2_5-2_7GH...l-Antenna.html. Because this has 18dBi of gain you don't have to worry about losses from the window or from the cable that you will use to run from the antenna to your Clear Hub Express so pretty much this will give you the same (or even better) performance as you are getting with the Clear Hub by the window.
You can get this antenna as part of ...

This discusses techniques available to improve the received signal strength for dual-mode 3G/4G modems capable of Cellular/PCS 3G data and 4G WiMax. For example for the Sierra 250U modem available from Clearwire and Sprint.
Current WiMax modems in the market implement 2xReceive MIMO diversity which means they have 2 integrated antennas and, where available, two external antenna ports. For dual 3G/4G modems one of these antenna ports, typically the primary, is used for both Cellular/PCS as well as WiMax frequency band and the secondary antenna port is used for WiMax 4G MIMO diversity only.
Fig1: Sierra 250U 3G/4G Modem antenna connectors
Due to the presence of multiple wireless protocols operating in difference frequency bands supported by the two external antenna ports its important to get the right antenna necessary for the particular band you need. For example if you only need to use it in a 4G coverage area then you don't need to have an antenna that supports 3G.
Boost 3G Only: Useful for example for use in areas with no 4G. Standard cellular boosting techniques can be used. For example you can use a 1900MHz PCS Yagi antenna directly attached to the modem or use it in conjuction with a cellular amplifier/repeater either directly connected to the modem or rebroadcasting the amplifier signal a modem in close proximity Learn More
Boost 4G Only: This is the most common setup for fixed sites like buildings since you already have a prior knowledge of the existence of 4G. Our most popular antenna kit includes both directional or omnidirecional antenna options to boost the 4G WiMax signal. See an example drawing on using a 16dBi panel antenna in ANT#1 port and a 12dBi omnidirectional antenna in ANT#2 port.
Boost BOTH 3G & 4G:
Method1: Manual switchover of antennas.
Simply get a 3G antenna and a 4G antenna, two low-loss coaxial cables and two pigtails and manually switch over antennas as needed. The benefit of this is that you can get the best performance antenna available in each band. High performance single-band antennas are generally more readily available that antennas that can support both the cellular/pcs band as well as the 2.5-2.7GHz WiMax band. Disadvantage is that you lose the benefit of seamless failover from 4G to 3G that is provided by the modem. For example if you are running fine on 4G and the 4G signal fades below the threshold where it becomes unuseable you would lose a connec...

Wrong antenna or cables used
Typically the problem is with the cable but we have seen people use 2.4GHz antennas and get surprised that everything is not working as well. Remember antennas are passive and by design wide-band (just how good they perform at different bands than what they were intended for is a different story). So an antenna designed for 2.4GHz will not completely block the signal but the performance will deteriorate significantly outside the bandpass. Same goes for Coaxial cable

Here is an excellent primer from Motorolas Networks & Enterprise Group that addresses a lot of the issues we have been discussing here on MIMO multiantenna transmission techniques and when you can use one antenna instead of two antennas.

The key takeaway is that when a CPE (customer premise equipment) has multiple antennas and is using MIMO Matrix A with Space-Time Block Coding, if an external directional high-gain wimax antenna is mounted to provide a line-of-sight (LOS) or near-line-of-sight (nlos) to a base-station,...